Risk of Ruin is the mathematical probability that you'll reach a certain loss percentage — or blow your entire account — given your current win rate, average risk per trade, and account size. It's one of the most underrated concepts in trading.
Many traders think in terms of "my strategy works, so I'm safe." But even with a profitable strategy, your account is at risk if your risk management is off. Risk of Ruin shows you exactly how large that danger is — in numbers.
Risk of Ruin — the core concept
Risk of Ruin is the probability that a statistically possible losing streak causes you to lose your account (or a critical percentage of it), even if your strategy is profitable in the long run.
Why a profitable strategy doesn't protect you
Say you have a strategy with a 50% win rate and 1:2 RR. Positive expectancy — theoretically profitable. But if you risk 5% of your account per trade, what's the probability of experiencing 10 consecutive losers at some point?
At 50% win rate, the chance of 10 losers in a row is: (0.5)^10 = 0.1% — seems tiny. But over 1,000 trades, the probability that this happens at some point becomes much larger. And 10 losers in a row at 5% risk per trade = 40% account drawdown.
At a prop firm with a 10% max drawdown, this means: account blown. Not because your strategy doesn't work, but because your risk per trade was too large for the statistical variance of your system.
The three factors that determine Risk of Ruin
1. Risk per trade (% of account)
This is the biggest lever. Halve your risk per trade and your Risk of Ruin drops dramatically. The relationship is not linear — the effect of reducing risk is exponentially large. Most professional traders risk 0.5%–2% per trade.
2. Win rate and risk-reward (expectancy)
The more positive your expectancy, the lower your Risk of Ruin. A strategy with a higher win rate or better RR has shorter expected losing streaks, and therefore less chance of hitting a critical drawdown level.
3. The "ruin" threshold
This is the loss percentage you define as "ruin." For prop firms, this is the max drawdown (10% at FTMO, 10% at Funding Pips). For personal accounts, you define it yourself — many traders use 25–30% as their personal stop level.
Practical guidelines for low Risk of Ruin
Risk of Ruin at prop firms
At prop firms, Risk of Ruin is especially relevant because the ruin threshold is clearly defined: the max drawdown. At Funding Pips this is 10%, at FTMO also 10%. That means a 10% account loss leads to an account reset.
With a daily drawdown limit of 5% (Funding Pips), the math is simple: on one bad day you cannot lose more than 5%. If you risk 2% per trade, that means after 2.5 losers in a row you stop — not because you want to, but because you're forced to.
This is why most experienced prop firm traders risk no more than 1% per trade — even if their backtest shows 2% works. The safety margins at prop firms are thin, and the cost of exceeding them is high.
How to calculate your own Risk of Ruin
The exact calculation is complex, but the simplified formula for Risk of Ruin is:
RoR = ((1 − edge) / (1 + edge)) ^ (threshold / risk_per_trade)Where 'edge' is your expectancy expressed as a fraction of risk, 'threshold' is the ruin threshold, and 'risk_per_trade' is the percentage per trade.
In practice you'd use a RoR calculator — but the principle is always the same: smaller risk per trade and higher expectancy = exponentially lower Risk of Ruin.
Conclusion
Risk of Ruin is the mathematical reality behind every trading account. A profitable strategy offers no absolute protection if your risk per trade is too large. The only way to protect your account is to combine small, consistent position sizes with positive expectancy — and never, under any pressure, increase your risk to recover a loss.
Frequently asked questions
Read also: What is Expectancy? · Trading Discipline Guide